85 place 29
Climate scientists reveal that millions of today's young people will live through unprecedented lifetime exposure to heatwaves, crop failures, river floods, droughts, wildfires and tropical storms under current climate policies. If global temperatures rise by 3.5 C by 2100, 92% of children born in 2020 will experience unprecedented heatwave exposure over their lifetime, affecting 111 million children. Meeting the Paris Agreement's 1.5 C target could protect 49 million children from this risk. This is only f
A newsletter a day!
You may get 10 most important news around midday in daily newsletter. Press the button and we will send you the most important news only, no spam attached.
LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!
Alfredo Linares and Raegan Kline closed their business to move to Mexico, but it was worth it to avoid getting separated if Linares was deported. Read more ›
5,160 fresh
He said about the unilateral tariffs: "You don't have to use it. You don't have to shop in the United States, as I say." Read more ›
1,577 fresh
Marian Barry, 70, was exhausted from working as a travel nurse during the pandemic, so she moved into a trailer and lives and volunteers in parks. Read more ›
1,521 fresh
Some people are speculating that Google is planning to discontinue AOSP, but the company says these claims are false. Read more ›
826 fresh
A handful of key mortgage rates increased. But a series of rate cuts from the Fed could help mortgage rates fall in the long term. Read more ›
636 fresh
Back at Google I/O, Google announced that it was indeed making a desktop mode or desktop windowing feature for Android 16 that would allow you to connect a phone to a display and get a desktop-like experience. They had worked with Samsung on it, because of their expertise from their DeX product, and planned to … Continued Read the original post: Android 16’s Desktop Mode Arrived in QPR1 Beta 2,... Read more ›
612
Whether it's weird workout classes or wild exercise devices, the rise of Ozempic is supercharging America's desire for quick-fix fitness hacks. Read more ›
591 fresh
Mykhailo Drapatyi, a 42-year-old general who took command as Ukraine pushed for military reform, said he replaced half of the leaders under him. Read more ›
497 fresh
A Marine Corps spokesman told BI there were concerns about prank calls, harassment, and doxxing of leaders and their families amid the protests. Read more ›
433
French startup Kolet has secured $10M (approximately €9M) in Series A funding led by Daphni to advance its digital eSIM connectivity platform for travellers. Founded by Eduardo Ronzano, Anne-Carole Cöen, Jérémy Gotteland, and Mehdi Chraibi at the beginning of 2024 in Paris, the startup has now raised a total of €14M across two funding rounds ... Read more Read more ›
365 fresh
Tesla, which is battling a global sales slump amid backlash against CEO Elon Musk's political interventions, saw its sales in the UK fall 36% in May. Read more ›
325
Huawei just announced the Pura 80 family, including a new Ultra. As has become the norm for the company, it didn’t reveal which chipsets are powering these phones – officially, Huawei only says that they are 36% faster than their Pura 70 counterparts and that’s it. The Huawei Pura 80 Pro+ and 80 Ultra are powered by Kirin 9020 Folks over at Weibo already shared some hands-on photos with the... Read more ›
292 fresh
Editor’s Note: This post was created in collaboration with and with financial support from EIT Digital. If you’re also interested in partnering with us, just reach out. Got a bold tech idea but unsure how to take the first step? Across Europe, countless aspiring entrepreneurs are sitting on innovative concepts—solutions that could reshape industries, solve pressing challenges, or even ... Read more ›
259 fresh
Connections: Sports Edition is a New York Times word game about finding common sports threads between words. How to solve the puzzle. Read more ›
245 fresh
Schultz said he did a "cartwheel in my living room" when he heard Niccol's turnaround plan for the coffee chain. Read more ›
239 fresh
Depositors earn the right to participate in the sale based on their final units at the time of the lock-up. Read more ›
220 fresh
Never mind the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 2. We now have a leak about the chip that could power devices like the Galaxy S27. Read more ›
208 fresh
A violent solar eruption on May 31 launched a coronal mass ejection (CME) hurtling toward Earth, triggering a rare G4-level geomagnetic storm alert. Captured in real-time by U.S. Naval Research Laboratory instruments, this cosmic blast has the potential to disrupt satellites, communications, and military systems. Read more ›
157
Frogs, salamanders, and other amphibians are not just battling habitat loss and pollution they're now also contending with increasingly brutal heat waves and droughts. A sweeping 40-year study shows a direct link between the rise in extreme weather events and the growing number of species landing on the endangered list. Europe, the Amazon, and Madagascar have become danger zones, with amphibians unable to adapt quickly enough. But there s hope... Read more ›
131
An international team of scientists has unveiled the largest and most detailed map of the universe ever created using the James Webb Space Telescope, revealing nearly 800,000 galaxies stretching back to almost the beginning of time. The COSMOS-Web project not only challenges long-held beliefs about galaxy formation in the early universe but also unexpectedly revealed 10 times more galaxies than anticipated along with supermassive black holes Hubble couldn t see. Read more ›
85
Scientists have discovered that people with COPD have lung cells that contain over three times as much soot-like carbon as those of smokers without the disease. These overloaded cells are larger and trigger more inflammation, suggesting that pollution and carbon buildup not just smoking may drive the disease. Read more ›
42
In a world where over a billion smartphones are produced yearly, a team of researchers is flipping the script on electronic waste. Instead of tossing out older phones, they ve demonstrated a groundbreaking approach: turning outdated smartphones into micro data centers. This low-cost innovation (just 8 euros per phone) offers practical applications from tracking bus passengers to monitoring marine life without needing new tech. Read more ›
38
A revolutionary STI test developed by UK-based Linear Diagnostics is on track to dramatically reduce the time it takes to detect infections like gonorrhea and chlamydia. Built on ultra-fast EXPAR DNA amplification technology, the platform can deliver lab-accurate results in as little as five minutes, without sending samples to centralized labs. Read more ›
34
In the dense forests of Michigan s Upper Peninsula, archaeologists have uncovered a massive ancient agricultural system that rewrites what we thought we knew about Native American farming. Dating back as far as the 10th century, the raised ridged fields built by the ancestors of the Menominee Indian Tribe covered a vast area and were used for cultivating staple crops like corn and squash. Using drone-mounted lidar and excavations, researchers... Read more ›
31
Humpback whales have been observed blowing bubble rings during friendly interactions with humans a behavior never before documented. This surprising display may be more than play; it could represent a sophisticated form of non-verbal communication. Scientists from the SETI Institute and UC Davis believe these interactions offer valuable insights into non-human intelligence, potentially helping refine our methods for detecting extraterrestrial life. Their findings underscore the intelligence, curiosity, and. Read more ›
27
For millions of years, large herbivores like mastodons and giant deer shaped the Earth's ecosystems, which astonishingly stayed stable despite extinctions and upheavals. A new study reveals that only twice in 60 million years did environmental shifts dramatically reorganize these systems once with a continental land bridge, and again with climate-driven habitat change. Yet the ecosystems adapted, with new species taking on old roles. Now, a third, human-driven tipping point... Read more ›
27
In a bold reimagining of Southeast Asia s prehistory, scientists reveal that the Philippine island of Mindoro was a hub of human innovation and migration as far back as 35,000 years ago. Advanced tools, deep-sea fishing capabilities, and early burial customs show that early humans here weren t isolated they were maritime pioneers shaping a wide-reaching network across the region. Read more ›
25
Most popular sources
![]() |
33% 1 |
![]() |
9% 4 |
![]() |
7% 5 |
![]() |
5% 1 |
![]() |
5% 1 |
View sources » |
LIKE us on Facebook so you won't miss the most important news of the day!
12.06.2025 04:51
Last update: 04:45 EDT.
News rating updated: 11:41.
What is Times42?
Times42 brings you the most popular news from tech news portals in real-time chart.
Read about us in FAQ section.